Nicholas Down
Sketchbook by Lina Naas from Sweden
There’s just one week left to sign up for The Sketchbook Project 2016! Click here to learn more, and to sign up by January 31st
“Chicago”. Photo by Ziomalski.
Little House on the Ferry GO Logic
CLT’s were utilized as a construction solution for a seasonal residence that can be applied to remote locations, including the many beautiful and difficult-to-access islands off the coast of Maine. The residence, Little House on the Ferry, consists of three small structures—a living unit and two bedroom units that are linked by an exterior deck—that follow the land’s topography and are arranged to create a loosely enclosed outdoor space that can be accessed from multiple points.
Images and text via GO Logic
Flatland Aydin Buyuktas
if you had to drop out of a class you are not a failure
if you had to take time off school you are not a failure
if you had to leave school for good you are not a failure
your worth is not determined by academia and this goes doubly so for disabled people and others for whom school is set against them
Johnston Home, Menlo Park designers, CA. David Duncan Livingston photo.
White Buffalo Ranch. Coburn Development, Boulder design-build firm, CO. Murphy Foto Imagery.
Denton Developments, Redondo Beach general contractor, CA.
Bath House Peter Jungmann
Caruso St John, Elysée-Mudac Museum, 2015, Lausanne, Switzerland
You can’t solve all your problems by drawing pictures, but it’s worth a try.
Math professor (via mathprofessorquotes)
Model kits are the legos of college
My Organic chemistry professor (via adventuresinchemistry)
Mamiya Shinichi Design Studio. The House of Cloister. Nagoya. Aichi prefecture. Japan. photos: Mamiya Shinichi Design Studio
Holladay residence, UT. THINK architecture, Salt Lake City. Josh Caldwell photo.
shop sneaker Get your daily kitten on facebook: http://ift.tt/1IC7pbr on tumblr: http://ift.tt/1NG2z2Y
peek-a-boo🐈
Arbol Design. House In Ikoma. Nara. Japan. photos. Yasunori Shimomura
Division St. conversion. Emerick Architects, Portland, OR. Lincoln Barber photo.
Maletz Design, Brooklyn architects & building designers, NYC.
Reiulf Ramstad Arkitekter. Split View Mountain House .Havsdalen, Buskerud, Norway. photos: Søren Harder Nielsen, Reiulf Ramstad Arkitekter
Get your daily kitten on facebook: http://ift.tt/1IC7pbr on tumblr: http://ift.tt/1NG2z2Y
as previously illustrated in these posts, kilauea, a flat broad shield volcano, has been erupting continuously from its pu’u o’o vent since 1983, growing the island by about 42 acres a year as its basaltic lava flow, with a temperature over one thousand degree celsius, ooze at a speed of fifteen yards an hour into the ocean. the last photo is notable for the multiple vortices spinning off the billowing plumes of steam, which rain down drops of hydrochloric acid. (click pic or link for credit x, x, x, x, x)
If you thought the Kepler spacecraft’s glory days were over, think again. Today at the 227th meeting of the American Astronomical Society, astronomers announced a whopping 234 new exoplanet candidates discovered by Kepler in 2014. The best part? All of them are just tens of light years away.
The deluge of planetary candidates are distributed among 208 star systems, which means we have the honor of welcoming many new multi-planet systems to our cosmic neighborhood. While these candidates aren’t confirmed yet, there’s a good chance most of them will be, according to Andrew Vanderburg of the Harvard Center for Astrophysics, who presented the findings today. All 234 were found during the first year of the K2 mission, which is scanning stars across the plane of our solar system, moving from one field of view to the next.
Add these K2 planets to the 4,600+ candidate worlds (1,918 confirmed planets) discovered during Kepler’s original mission, and it’s fair to say this little telescope has become one hell of a planet hunter.
Continue Reading.
Design Harmony, Kirkland, WA. Cory Holland Photography.
Nintendo Skittles Animations made by Matt McManis